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pchapman

Canadian CF-18 low altitude bailout (pics & video)

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A Canadian fighter pilot did a nice ejection yesterday, during a practice for a weekend airshow.

It is some good low altitude parachuting!

It's not quite as spectacular as the classic MiG-29 bailout at the Paris airshow 20 odd years ago -- the trajectory is more horizontal -- nor is it quite as low & high speed as the Thunderbirds F-16 ejection at Mountain Home a few years back. Still a good one though.

Frrom youtube video, eg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYXYyBnNJDs, it looks like it was during a high angle of attack slow pass.

It makes for a good show, although on the expensive side.

Attachments are a couple pics of the bailout from the web.

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It makes for a good show, although on the expensive side.



No shit! Especially when you consider that this was just PRACTICE [/alleniverson]. That poor bastard has to drag himself out of the hospital and do it 3 or 4 more times this weekend!!

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Funny how that song caught everyone's attention.
I know it just wouldnt be right to kill all the stupid people that we meet..

But do you think it would be appropriate to just remove all of the warning labels and let nature take its course.

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Once again, the evil power of the BeeGees is shown in full force. When will people realize the destructive power of those fast flying high notes?

maybe Saddam Hussain had a couple of BeeGees CD's :P
scissors beat paper, paper beat rock, rock beat wingsuit - KarlM

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Wonder if he bought the rigger a bottle? :D

That was a pretty damn fast punch out, pilot was on his game! Talk about a short reserve ride!

"I may be a dirty pirate hooker...but I'm not about to go stand on the corner." iluvtofly
DPH -7, TDS 578, Muff 5153, SCR 14890
I'm an asshole, and I approve this message

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Right, 'cos low alt, low speed and high AOA would be of the easiest times to deal with an engine failure...



Oh, clearly a challenge, but there's no reason he wouldn't have been operating within the specs of the aircraft. Airshows are a demonstration, not test piloting.
quade -
The World's Most Boring Skydiver

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So should he be able to handle an engine out?

Normally, yes, but who knows during a high AoA slow pass. Way behind the power curve. With a loss of power he might have to trade away altitude to get airspeed again to reduce drag, but he didn't have altitude.

But it is interesting to see that he didn't just mush downwards, but lost control in yaw.

Even with engines near the centerline, in a relatively modern fighter that has reasonable high angle of attack capability, it seems like losing an engine during a slow high alpha pass may be hard to control.

Not sure what sort of Vmc applies to an F-18!

The Russian in the MiG-29 at Paris, wasn't he doing something similar, and lost an engine from a birdstrike? He rolled / yawed right over into a vertical dive before ejecting.

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Right, 'cos low alt, low speed and high AOA would be of the easiest times to deal with an engine failure...



Oh, clearly a challenge, but there's no reason he wouldn't have been operating within the specs of the aircraft. Airshows are a demonstration, not test piloting.



High alpha flybys at airshows have been a staple for decades.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LtfljZqJmQ

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It's difficult for me to see what the hell went wrong. It was just a slow speed pass. Even if his right engine failed, he should have been able to recover.



[armchair with beer dispersor hat] He was probably banging against the stall threshold the whole maneuver that when he noticed that the nose started to drift too much to adequately correct in time,or the correction itself would increase the stall, he knew it was unrecoverable[my beer ran out]
_____________________________

"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you can never know if they are genuine" - Abraham Lincoln

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It's difficult for me to see what the hell went wrong. It was just a slow speed pass. Even if his right engine failed, he should have been able to recover.



Photos posted elsewhere show one nozzle closed, one open...you can also see as the nose slices right the rudders are hard left...classic signs of a loss of thrust/vmc departure IMO.
SmugMug

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Did anyone notice the awesome irony in the second pic of a disintegrating aircraft with nobody in it striking the ground right behind a sign marked "Entering Vehicle Control Zone"?

:D:D:D
-B

Live and learn... or die, and teach by example.

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It's difficult for me to see what the hell went wrong. It was just a slow speed pass. Even if his right engine failed, he should have been able to recover.



Seriously? Did you really make this comment? How much training do you have on a CF-18? How many hours have you logged flying a CF-18? Why should he have been able to recover???

What do you know that perhaps that trained pilot was not aware of at the time he decided to save his ass?

Words dont even describe how idiotic your comment was.

wow.

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